The darkness inside the creature's maw was absolute.
Not the simple absence of light, but a void so complete that it seed to devour the very concept of illumination. Nero's transford body hung suspended in that blackness, surrounded by crushing pressure and the stench of ancient decay.
The tendrils constricted tighter, their shadowy flesh pressing against him from all sides. They were trying to digest him, to break him down into component parts that could be absorbed and consud.
But Nero's Yang form had other ideas.
His mouth opened wider, the jaw unhinging like a serpent's. The crimson glow from his eyes cut through the darkness in twin beams of bloody light, illuminating the writhing mass of tendrils that filled the creature's throat. His skin, now black as obsidian, rippled with patterns that weren't quite shadows and weren't quite solid matter—sothing between the two, sothing that existed in the spaces where reality grew thin.
The shadows poured from his mouth like smoke, like liquid darkness given terrible purpose.
They wrapped around the nearest tendril and pulled.
The flesh tore.
Not cleanly. Not surgically. The tendril ca apart in ragged strips, its dark substance shredding under the assault of Nero's shadows. Whatever material it was made of—part physical, part ethereal—offered no resistance to the consuming darkness that emanated from Nero's transford body.
He bit down.
His teeth, elongated and sharp, sank into the torn tendril. The flesh was cold and tasted of salt and copper and sothing older than either. It had the texture of rotten fish, slick and yielding, but underneath was sothing harder, almost crystalline.
Nero's human consciousness, buried deep beneath the Yang form's hunger, recoiled in horror.
*This is wrong. This is disgusting. I'm eating—*
**DEVOUR.**
The thought was obliterated by the overwhelming imperative that drove the Yang form. There was no room for disgust, no space for human revulsion. Only hunger. Only the need to consu, to take, to make the prey's strength his own.
Nero swallowed.
The tendril's flesh slid down his throat, and imdiately his body began to change. The Vineheart in his core pulsed with violent intensity, processing the consud matter at impossible speed. Energy flooded through him—not Ein Sof, not divine power, but sothing raw and primal. The strength of the thing he was devouring.
More tendrils wrapped around his body, trying to crush him, trying to force him deeper into the creature's digestive system.
Nero's shadows multiplied.
They spread out from his body like the roots of so terrible tree, seeking, grasping, finding purchase in the writhing mass of appendages. Each shadow that touched a tendril began to consu it, breaking down the dark flesh and drawing it back toward Nero's transford form.
He grabbed a tendril with both hands and pulled it to his mouth.
Bit down.
Tore.
Swallowed.
The flesh was freezing cold going down, so cold it burned. Nero's throat contracted around it, forcing the mass of tissue deeper. His stomach should have rebelled, should have rejected the alien matter. But the Vineheart wouldn't allow it. Instead, it processed the consud flesh faster, converting it into raw energy that spread through Nero's body in waves of terrible strength.
The creature in the depths stirred.
Nero felt it through the connection of flesh and shadow—the vast consciousness beginning to wake from its eternal slumber. It had been sleeping for so long that the concept of awareness had beco foreign to it. But now sothing was inside it, eating it from within, and that sensation was impossible to ignore.
A sound echoed through the darkness, transmitted through water and flesh and the very fabric of the space they occupied. Not quite a roar, not quite a scream. Sothing between the two, a sound of confusion and ancient rage.
The tendrils around Nero constricted with renewed violence.
His ribs, already broken, cracked further under the pressure. His left arm, the bone shattered from the earlier fall, ground against itself in a way that would have made him scream if he'd been fully human.
But he wasn't fully human anymore.
The Yang form didn't care about broken bones or crushed organs. It had transcended such concerns. Pain was just sensation, and sensation was irrelevant when asured against hunger.
Nero's shadows wrapped around a dozen tendrils at once and pulled them all toward his mouth.
He ate.
And ate.
And ate.
The flesh kept coming, an endless stream of dark matter that filled his mouth faster than he could swallow. His throat bulged obscenely as mass after mass of tendril was forced down. His stomach distended, his body swelling with the volu of material being consud.
And still the Vineheart processed it all, breaking down the alien flesh and converting it into energy that flooded through Nero's system like liquid fire.
Deep in the buried fragnts of his human consciousness, Nero felt himself fragnting.
*I'm losing myself. This isn't . I'm not this thing that eats and devours and—*
**DEVOUR.**
The imperative crashed through his thoughts like a wave, scattering them. There was no room for identity, no space for the construct called "Nero" or "human" or "self." There was only the act of consumption, the eternal hunger, the need to take and take and take until nothing remained.
His humanity was drowning in darkness.
But even as it drowned, even as the Yang form's nature threatened to consu what little remained of his human mind, sothing in Nero refused to let go completely.
A mory surfaced through the hunger.
His mother's face. Not clear—he'd been too young when she died to rember her features precisely. But the feeling of her. The warmth. The safety of being held.
*I am Nero. I am human. I am not just this hunger.*
The thought was fragile, barely coherent, but it persisted.
The creature in the depths thrashed, and the entire lake seed to convulse with it. Water churned violently, creating currents that tore at Nero's body. More tendrils erged from the vast thing's flesh, hundreds of them, thousands, all converging on the source of pain within its gullet.
They wrapped around Nero like constrictors, like the roots of so terrible plant seeking to strangle and crush and destroy.
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